Europe | Mind the gap

Why life expectancy is lower in eastern Europe

The final curtain falls earlier in ex-communist countries

FROM Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, a health divide has fallen across Europe. Although in global terms citizens of the EU live long (2.5 years more than in America and 4.6 years more than in China), the continent is divided. At the farthest ends of the spectrum, Spaniards from Madrid can expect to live to 85, but Bulgarians from the region of Severozapaden are predicted to live just past their 73rd birthday—a gap of almost 12 years. The only exceptions are Slovenia, which scrapes in above the EU average, and Denmark, which falls a fraction below.

It was not always that way. In the mid-1960s Latvians and Lithuanians still blew out as many birthday candles as the citizens of Cyprus and France. But “the political division of Europe is important,” says Denny Vagero, a professor of medical sociology at Stockholm University. After a long period of convergence caused by reductions in child mortality, the east of the continent gradually fell behind after the iron curtain descended.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline "Europe’s chronic health problem"

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